Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Future Human Services Worker:. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(7pp) As the community of neighborhoods expand
into the country at large, and grow more enmeshed
with each other in the future, new methods of
treatment and solution will need to be created for
both the client and the human service worker. The
complexity of issues, resulting in a downward spiral
for the client will need to be addressed as well as
the energy level of the human service worker. It
will no longer be appropriate for an agency to
accept "burn-out" of its most valuable resource,
its staff - the investment in time and training of
that worker is also a community resource to be
valued.
Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBhumsv.doc.
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
and solution will need to be created for both the client and the human service worker. The complexity of issues, resulting in a downward spiral for the client will
need to be addressed as well as the energy level of the human service worker. It will no longer be appropriate for an agency to accept "burn-out" of its
most valuable resource, its staff - the investment in time and training of that worker is also a community resource to be valued. Juvenile Detention
The disparate treatment of minorities in Americas juvenile justice systems, as evidenced by the disproportionate confinement of minority juveniles in secure facilities, was brought to national attention
by the Coalition for Juvenile Justice in its 1988 annual report to Congress, A Delicate Balance (Coalition for Juvenile Justice, 1988). In the 1992 amendments to the JJDP Act, DMC
was elevated to a core requirement, with future funding eligibility tied to State compliance. Prevalence studies to examine the likelihood of juveniles being incarcerated in a juvenile corrections facility before
the age of 18 were subsequently conducted in 16 States (DeComo, 1993). These studies showed that African-American youth had the highest prevalence rates of all segments of the population
in 15 of the 16 States. In 2 States, it was estimated that 1 in 7 African-American males (compared with approximately 1 in 125 white males) would be incarcerated
before the age of 18. Although minority youth constituted about 32 percent of the youth population in the country in 1995, they represented 68 percent of the juvenile population in
secure detention and 68 percent of those in secure institutional environments such as training schools (Sickmund, Snyder, and Poe-Yamagata, 1997). These figures reflect significant increases over 1983, when minority
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